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Kantermann, Thomas; Theadom, Alice; Roenneberg, Till ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2939-0332 und Cropley, Mark (2012): Fibromyalgia Syndrome and Chronotype: Late Chronotypes Are More Affected. In: Journal of Biological Rhythms, Bd. 27, Nr. 2: S. 176-179 [PDF, 269kB]

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Abstract

Sleep has strong links to the symptomology of fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), a diffuse musculoskeletal pain disorder. Information about the involvement of the circadian clock is, however, sparse. In this study, 1548 individuals with FMS completed an online survey containing questions on demographics, stimulant consumption, sleep quality, well-being and subjective pain, chronotype (assessed by the Munich ChronoType Questionnaire, MCTQ), and FMS impact. Chronotype (expressed as the mid-sleep-point on free days, corrected for sleep deficit on workdays, MSFsc) significantly correlated with stress-ratings, so-called “memory failures in everyday life,” fatigue, FMS impact, and depression but not with anxiety. When chronotypes were categorized into 3 groups (early, intermediate, late), significant group differences were found for sum scores of perceived stress, memory failures in everyday life, fatigue, FMS impact, and depression but not anxiety, with late chronotypes being more affected than early chronotypes. Sleepiness ratings were highest in early chronotypes. Challenges of sleep quality and subjective pain were significantly increased in both early and late chronotypes. The results show that according to their reports, late chronotypes are more affected by fibromyalgia.

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